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Voice of Russia

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A 1969 Radio Moscow QSL card
A 1969 Radio Moscow QSL card

Radio Moscow was the official international broadcasting station of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. It began broadcasting in 1928 and continued to broadcast until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Its primary function was to broadcast pro-Soviet propaganda. The service continues to broadcast today as the Voice of Russia.

At its peak, Radio Moscow broadcast in over 50 languages using transmitters in the Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, and Cuba.

In the 1980s its English language service was renamed Radio Moscow World Service, in imitation of the BBC World Service. After the fall of the USSR in the 1990s it was renamed the World Service of the Voice of Russia.

Its interval signal was "Moscow Nights", played on chimes.

Since then, VOR World Service has used two further interval signals, "Midnight in Moscow", a version played by Ricky King, and also its current signal, "Pictures at an Exhibition" by Mussorgsky

One of the most popular programmes spanning both the Radio Moscow and Voice of Russia services is New Market, a programme looking at the Economic Climate and General Economic matters in Russia. Its current presenter is Eugene Nikitenko, but when it first started, it was hosted by two people, Joe Osipova and Magda Korlacheynko.

It was Radio Moscow that gave Margaret Thatcher the nickname "The Iron Lady".

External links



de:Stimme Russlands ja:ロシアの声

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